
With a world championship so tight, I think both Fernando (Canada 2007) and Felipe (Singapore 2008) could say that they didn't win that year due to safety car incidents. You can say that Fernando seemed to be driving a lawnmower in Montreal, but it's hard to imagine he wouldn't have gotten two additional points were he not given that stop and go penalty.D'Leh wrote: Also, let's be honest. The lottery wasn't really that bad. Nobody lost his well deserved victory to a situation like that. Plus a safety car will always cause some serious mixup. Some profit, others suffer. It's racing, unpredictable things can happen. That's what makes it exciting.
Nothing was stopping Fernando carrying a couple of laps more fuel like some other drivers were, it was his decision not to have a safety margin.Miguel wrote:With a world championship so tight, I think both Fernando (Canada 2007) and Felipe (Singapore 2008) could say that they didn't win that year due to safety car incidents. You can say that Fernando seemed to be driving a lawnmower in Montreal, but it's hard to imagine he wouldn't have gotten two additional points were he not given that stop and go penalty.
EDIT: There sure are other issues why they didn't win (i.e. Fuji crash or Silverstone), but one point off the winner?
He didn't have that choice at McLaren. Furthermore, McLaren decided to bring Hamilton in the lap before. And if you say that nothing stopped Fernando from going to the pits that same lap... then, sorry, that's further than I'm willing to go.myurr wrote:Nothing was stopping Fernando carrying a couple of laps more fuel like some other drivers were, it was his decision not to have a safety margin.
But that's the gamble they are then taking, that they won't get caught out. Otherwise you're going to be sitting pretty when they all get their drive through penalties.Miguel wrote:He didn't have that choice at McLaren. Furthermore, McLaren decided to bring Hamilton in the lap before. And if you say that nothing stopped Fernando from going to the pits that same lap... then, sorry, that's further than I'm willing to go.
I know a few people think that given the safety car rules all drivers should carry a bail out amount of fuel. However, we've seen Rosberg caught (twice or three times at least), we've seen Rubens caught, and we've seen other drivers too. The thing is, the rules don't specify for how long the pit lane will stay closed, so there is no safe amount of fuel. What happens if you are at spa, with 7km/lap and an unreasonable fuel penalty? Are you going to give all your opponents 3 tenths per lap? 5 tenths maybe?
WhiteBlue wrote:A car whose wheels are changed after the three-minute signal no longer has to start from the back of the grid nor suffer a drive-through penalty. Instead, a mere ten-second penalty (added to the time at the end of the race) will be applied.
Thanks for the detailed post WhiteBlue. As also mentioned by others here, I am a bit disappointed in these penalties though - not that they're penalties, but that they're applied after the race. This sort of end-result editing is what ruins sporting spectacle. As a baseline aspect of entertainment and sport - the person/team who win the game live should remain the victor... not have to wait to tally up all of the penalties dished out during the race for an amended finishing order.WhiteBlue wrote:A penalty has now been defined for anyone who refuels during a race suspension despite not being in the pit lane when the suspension was triggered. The penalty is ten seconds of time.
In general I have the same reaction - but McLaren and Ferrari at least were carrying that spare fuel last season. And that's a better solution, in my eyes, to having a situation where by Alonso overtakes Massa for the lead (for example) but only gets 9.5 seconds up the track before the end of the race and ends up second due to an earlier time penalty.Miguel wrote:The thing about times is that they have been applied before. I can at least remember that the 1994 Japanese grand prix was decided like that. That race was split in two, and Schumacher finished the first part in first position, with an advantage of a couple of seconds over Damon Hill. In the end, Damon Hill won by a fraction on aggregate times. I don't think this would be much different, although I agree it would just obfuscate thngs.
Regarding the pitlane penalties and onboard fuel, I just find absolutely contradicting that cars made the ligtest possible and then get ballast to barely go above 605 kg with driver and liquids other than fuel carry spare laps. Weight is a terrible penalty, and my racing instinct tells me that it's just wrong to carry fuel "just in case". That's what I do when I drive. I have the feeling Colin Chapman would never ever carry fuel "just in case". I know I put a controversial example, but my heart keeps telling me "spare fuel? WTF!" I'm sure the guys at Honda that devised the double bladder fuel tank think the same way
Yeah that (Canada 07) was the only time McLaren and Ferrari got caught by that rule. After that it never happened to them again. And guess what, that was also the first race the rule was in effect. The according regs had been changed just before Canada 07.Miguel wrote:He didn't have that choice at McLaren.myurr wrote:Nothing was stopping Fernando carrying a couple of laps more fuel like some other drivers were, it was his decision not to have a safety margin.
So...all I can glean from what Charlie said is that they've devised some kind of technical means to prevent a "race to the pits" scenario and police the rule at the same time using the cars' onboard SECU.C. Whiting wrote:...The only difference is we intend to implement a minimum time back to the pits. When we deploy the safety car, the message will go to all the cars, which will then have a “safety car” mode on their ECUs. As soon as that message gets to the car, it’ll know where it is on the circuit, and it’ll calculate a minimum time for the driver to get back to the pits. The driver will have to respect this and the information will be displayed on his dashboard.
If you remember, the reason we closed the pit entry was to remove the incentive for the driver to come back to his pit quickly. That’s gone now, as you won’t be able to reach the pits any quicker than your dashboard display allows you to.
I don't think it's such a mayor gray area. And I'll tell you why. Before the safety car is deployed, all cars go full-speed through the track, with the exception where yellow flags are waved. And in any case cars go pretty fast there too. Even today. So this new rule, should it work as intended, would result in less of a lottery than it is today, while eliminate part of the risk there was before the "lottery car".shir0 wrote:Still...he did not say that they've devised any means to prevent the same "race to the pits" scenario while the drivers are anticipating the safety car release. This still leaves a major gray-area in rules which will be subject to much controversial interpretations.